ARAÚJO, C. M. S.; ARAÚJO, Claudervânio Madeiro de Souza.
Resumen:
This scientific work is to analyze the consequences that the judicial secrecy generates the Center for Legal Practice, the Center for Legal and Social Sciences from the Federal University of Campina Grande. In the Brazilian legal system has as a rule, the publicity of procedural acts , however, this rule is not absolute , being limited by judicial secrecy , which occurs in the public interest or actions that deal with family law. The purpose of judicial secrecy is to protect the privacy of the parties, preventing third parties unrelated to the process have access to intimate information .However , this secret justice that protects the parties , you restrict access to justice and, learning of the trainees NPJ , which generates a limited social function the same as the majority of shares are quoted in the Nucleus met silenced by effect of secrecy. Then the question that arises concerns the possibility of easing the effects of the course of justice, when it is facing lawsuits filed by NPJ, giving up so wide performance conditions for the trainee , both with respect to direct contact to the case file , such as broad participation in its development , before that, it will have a better judicial services to the public attended . Thus , aiming to achieve the goals proposed by the study , was used as a method of deductive approach , as methods of procedure the evolutionary history and legal - exegetical , and as a research technique , the literature , which launches hand doctrines , laws , scientific articles and judicial decisions as a means to ground and sustain the approach of the object ; well as data collection , since the proposed topic for research , are proven necessary information and harvested within a given sample . Based on the foregoing, it appears the need for relativization of judicial secrecy in the face of the principle of publicity so that the trainee can follow the entire course of the process and so do the NPJ an instrument of effective access to justice.